Alan Woods asking Ted Grant  "If you were to meet with Chavez, what would
you say to him?" He answered immediately: "*I would tell him to take power."
*
*
*
*from the ARTICLE - *
Ted Grant: 1913-2006 <http://www.marxist.com/ted-grant-obituary.htm>
Written by Alan WoodsThursday, 20 July 2006
[image: Print] <http://www.marxist.com/ted-grant-obituary/print.htm>[image:
E-mail]<http://www.marxist.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,cf40e205a82fbc17f3b0b63c5e5b3f2752a8bc3c/tmpl,component/>
*http://www.marxist.com/ted-grant-obituary.htm*
*------------------------------------------------*

*Ted Grant Internet Archive <http://www.tedgrant.org/>*
*-----------------------------------------------------------
*

http://www.socialistappeal.org/analysis/theory/1116-100-years-since-the-birth-of-ted-grant

100 Years Since the Birth of Ted
Grant<http://www.socialistappeal.org/analysis/theory/1116-100-years-since-the-birth-of-ted-grant>
[image: 
Print]<http://www.socialistappeal.org/analysis/theory/1116-100-years-since-the-birth-of-ted-grant#>

Written by Socialist AppealThursday, 07 February 2013 03:35
2013 marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of Ted Grant. Throughout the
coming year, *Socialist Appeal* will feature articles, quotes, books, and
booklets by our late comrade. We present here a brief biography of his life
and work, and invite our readers to learn more about his contributions to
Marxism by reading his writings (details below).

Ted Grant was born Isaac Blank in July 1913, in Germiston, South Africa,
near Johannesburg. He died near London, England in July 2006.

At a young age, he was introduced to the ideas of Marxism by a family
friend, Ralph Lee. In the late 1920s, after having read Trotsky and other
material by the International Left Opposition (ILO) in copies of the
American newspaper, *The Militant*, Grant, Lee and others organized the
Bolshevik-Leninist League of South Africa and subsequently, the Workers
Party of South Africa. They also played a key role in the reestablishment
of the Johannesburg Laundry Workers Union. In 1934, Grant and another
comrade, Sid Frost, departed for the “wider horizons” of Britain—the heart
of world capitalism and imperialism. The rest, as they say, was history.

En route to Britain they stopped in France and met with Leon Sedov,
Trotsky’s son and a leading member of the International Communist League
(which succeeded the ILO and was laying the foundations for the Fourth
International). In Britain, Grant joined the Labour League of Youth, the
Labour Party’s youth section at the time, and participated in the
day-to-day struggles against Oswald Mosley’s proto-fascist “blackshirts,”
including the famous Battle of Cable Street.

In 1938, after Ralph Lee’s arrival in Britain, they formed the Workers
International League, which experienced tremendous growth and development
throughout World War II. By 1944, the WIL had absorbed the remnants of the
Revolutionary Socialist League, a smaller Trotskyist group, and formed the
Revolutionary Communist Party, which built on the WIL’s previous work.

However, the objective situation after the war—an unprecedented and
prolonged capitalist boom and the relatively stable balance of power
between U.S. imperialism and Russian Stalinism—combined with the
bureaucratic maneuvers of the leadership of the Fourth International, cut
across the growth and success of the RCP and the organization
disintegrated. Nonetheless, throughout the 1950s Grant continued to defend
and put forward Marxist views in a variety of journals and magazines. By
1964, a new publication, *Militant*, began publication, under Grant’s
political direction.

These modest beginnings developed into the most successful Marxist tendency
in the Labour Party’s history, and one of the largest Trotskyist
organizations ever worldwide. Starting in 1964 with less than 50 comrades
scattered throughout Britain, the Militant Tendency grew to more than 8,000
members, with 3 members of the British parliament, a number of city
councilors, and decisive control over the Liverpool city council (1983–87).
They also held considerable influence within the Labour Party Young
Socialists and played a leading role in the anti–poll tax movement which
contributed to the fall of the Thatcher government.

The Militant Tendency was the largest section of the Committee for a
Workers International, formed in 1974, which had sections in many
countries. In 1991–92, the CWI broke apart on the basis of a split within
the British section. The majority of the leadership of Militant wanted to
abandon the orientation to the Labour Party and set up a separate
organization, beginning with the “Scottish Turn” in Scotland. Ted Grant,
along with Alan Woods, Rob Sewell, and many others, were expelled, forming
the *Socialist Appeal* group to continue the work. Internationally, there
were a handful of sections that went with the Grant group, and these were
subsequently organized into the Committee for a Marxist International,
later becoming the International Marxist Tendency (IMT).

In addition to remaining firm on the basic principles of Marxism in the
face of overwhelming social and political pressure during the postwar boom,
Ted Grant made several important theoretical contributions to Marxist
theory. In his analysis of the USSR, Eastern Europe, China and other
deformed workers states, he built on Leon Trotsky’s writings on “soviet
Bonapartism,” and developed the concept of “proletarian Bonapartism.” His
economic analysis of the difficult and complex postwar period is second to
none. Perhaps most importantly, his continued development of the approach
of Marxists to the mass organizations of the working class laid the
foundations for the successful development of the IMT around the world.

To read Ted Grant’s  original works, please visit the continually expanding
online archive at www.TedGrant.org. To purchase copies of Ted Grant’s *Selected
Works* (Wellred USA) and *Collected Works* (Wellred UK), be sure to visit
www.MarxistBooks.com.

And be sure to keep an eye out for volume three of Ted’s *Selected Works*,
as well as a new political biography of Ted Grant by Alan Woods, coming
soon from Wellred USA.

--------------------

*Ted Grant appealing against explusion, Labour Party Conference, 1983*
[image: Ted Grant appealing against explusion, Labour Party Conference,
1983]


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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